Riddick Plays AD&D

(And yes, I know they dropped the 'A' a while back. It will always be Advanced to me, baby.)

Amazon dropped me a line pointing out that I might want to order the upcoming 30 Years of Adventure : A Celebration of Dungeons & Dragons (D&D Retrospective) (Paperback) - which is a reasonably good guess, let's be honest. I thought I was familiar with the product - this is just the softcover version of the book that came out last year. Fair enough. However one thing did catch my eye - the softcover was edited by Peter Archer (which makes perfect sense - he's the head of the book department), but check out the author of the hardcover version. That's right Vin Diesel!

I poked around a bit and it's not as quite as outlandish as it sounds, apparently he really did write the foreword. I've been seeing more and more stuff about Amazon screwing up the author credit on books and apparently it's a real pain to get it straightened out, so I assume this is the same sort of thing. Anyway, it made me laugh.

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Freedom From Choice?

So them there Interweb denizens have gotten atwitter about the existence of Dev2.0 (which is a kid band covering Devo) I popped over and watched a couple of videos - and my final take is just pure perplexity. Who is this for? I mean, the videos manage to convey "Disney manufactured kiddie stuff" perfectly - there's some sort of interesting discussion there about what elements make it so obviously aimed at pre-teens. But then they are just basically doing bad Devo covers. Do pre-teens give a crap about Devo? Did I miss a memo? The next theory is that it's supposed to appeal to me somehow - that it is either ironic and/or retro. I don't buy that for a second. In the first place I have the original Devo songs on my iPod already, and in the second place, there's not an original bone in this melange.


We're left with the weak third case - the "multiple levels" approach. In this mode it's supposed to appeal to the kiddies while have richer levels for parents. See Pixar or Shrek for examples of this. But I'm not buying it there either. See, for that to work it has to first appeal to the kiddies, and I'm not convinced Devo songs do that. After you have that then you can layer on additional content that amuses parents. And I'm not convinced it does that either - the covers sound strictly inferior to me.

So I'm not outraged but I am perplexed. I'd love to see a coherent explanation of what the marketing plan actually is here.

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Pimpin'

Did I ever mention SF Novelists before? I should have. It's a community of science fiction novelists who are getting together to discuss the writing genre and to jointly promote everyone's work. I'm a member, albeit a quiet one as my book is not yet available. Anyway, it's a cool site, and you folks should check out the aggregated blog. Once I have a professional site set up I'll have stuff posted there as well - I think I'm going to keep this site seperate as a personal deal.


Anyhoo, there's a lot of free fiction that showed up from SFNovelist authors and I'd be remiss if I didn't point it out. Tobias S. Buckell (who organized SF Novelists) has his first book Crystal Rain coming out soon and he's posting the first third of the book here.

Chris Roberson is another SF Novelist member and he wrote Here, There & Everywhere - a book that Weezie recommended to me and I can endorse as an enjoyable romp through parallel worlds. He has Paragaea: A Planetary Romance due out in May, and he's set up a site for the book here - and you can download entire an entire prequel under a Creative Commons license.

I have to admit I haven't read either of these yet, but I'm downloading them and putting them in the queue now. But everyone from SF Novelists rocks the house, so go check 'em out! :-)

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Gmail - you know for phones!

http://m.gmail.com is the new mobile interface to gmail. Can't say too much about it, except in works on my Treo 600 - no muss no fuss. It's not fabulous, I wouldn't want to do much with it. But y'know it's gmail and it's available everywhere now. That's worth something.


I'm sure somebody is saying "but you have email on your Treo already. And I'm fairly certain that I do. First off, I've probably got some cruddy Sprint thingie I've never used. Second off, at one point in time I had it successfully communicating with my hiddenjester email - that might still work. HellifIknow. I can't remember the last time I tested that. Actually, I'm quite certain that send wouldn't work for that - I could probably read my email, but not send it.

Anyway, I know the web browser works, so setting up gmail as my "emergency on the go mail" is a nice thing.

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MS Keyboard for Mac

Microsoft will be releasing its popular curvy keyboard for the Mac later this year. Due sometime by summer, Microsoft will give Mac users a keyboard with a dedicated key that only the Mac understands. But that key won"t have the commonly found apple on it as Microsoft could not get proper authorization for its use. Instead, a clover will doan the key next to the spacebar for those special Apple functions. Also found on the keyboard will a key for ejecting optical discs such as a CD or DVD.

Microsoft To Make First Mac-only Keyboard ()

I don't know if I'll buy this or not. On the one hand, I'm excited to see MS support the Mac crowd. On the other hand, I know full well that the MS Natural keyboard works just fine on the Mac. Here I'll explain. Peabody set the wayback machine to 1994.


I graduated college in December 1992. I started my first "real job" in March of 1993 and it wasn't a programming gig. It was 1994 before I got a coding job, doing stuff that as far as I know is still classified. And it was in 1994 that I started noticed an alarming fact. The fourth fingers of both my hands hurt by the early afternoon. I experimented with a lot of things, and while I was trying different things Microsoft introduced the first "Natural Keyboard". I bought one - at the time it cost $99 which was a lot to me, but here I was at the start of my career and already my hands were crapping out on me. I bought my second one within a month - switching both my "main" computer at work and my home PC to the Natural Keyboard. I'll hate on Microsoft for a whole lot of stuff, but I seriously believe their keyboard saved my hands. I still use those two 12 year old keyboards. I'm typing this right now on my third Natural KB, but I bought that only because I wanted a USB keyboard. My last "real"job (when I worked at Crystal Dynamics) I still used one of those personally owned 12 year old MS natural keyboards with a PS/2 to USB adapter on it.

At home the USB version is attached to my KVM switch, which switches my keyboard, mouse and monitor amongst multiple computers. My Windows PC, my Linux box, and my Mac powerbook share three of the four inputs on that switch. (The fourth is unused since I shut down my Linux firewall and just use the Airport Extreme base station for firewall and NAT.) The USB version has some goofy keys, which I actually use - Volume +/- and Mute amongst a bunch of stuff I don't use.

Anyway, the Mac. This keyboard has "Windows" keys, which map to the Apple/Command key with no problem. I just tried the majority of the silly "media keys" across the top of this keyboard and the Mac do't read them. No matter, it does read the Volume and Mute keys and I use SizzlingKeys to do more elaborate iTunes transport control. Yes I lack the custom "eject" button but who uses that? Even when I'm using the Powerbook as a laptop I rarely reach for the eject button as opposed to doing something more GUI oriented. So I'm not sure what this MS keyboard really brings to the party. On the other hand, if you do a lot of typing and your hands hurt . . . what can I say? I really do believe this curved keyboard saved my career. I've never been to a doctor for RSI, I've never worn special wristbraces and I'm certain that had I continued to use straight line QWERTY keyboards I'd be a statistic by now. So if you use a Mac and your hands hurt after a hot keyboard session (URMKHOG), check out the Natural Keyboards. If you want an eject key wait for this version.

Oh and make sure you aren't getting the "Natural Elite" line. The Elite version is slightly more compact and noticably doesn't support the "inverted T" layout of the arrow keys, opting instead for a cross layout. More importantly the layout of Insert/Home/End/Page Up and so forth is wrong. (Actually the shot of the Mac keyboard seems to imply a split difference. The arrow keys are "inverted T" but the other navigation keys are funky, instead of the 3 x 2 array I'd claim is "right".) Anyways I hate the "Elite" version which is what any IT department will give you (it's cheaper than the normal version). But it's your hands and your career. I'd rather have a full size KB than the 4-5 inches of desk space the "Elite" version proffers.

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